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Producing High-Density High-Molecular-Weight Polymer Brushes by a “Grafting to” Method from a Concentrated Homopolymer Solution Warren Taylor* and Richard A. L. Jones University of Sheffield, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Hicks Building, Hounsfield Road, Sheffield, United Kingdom, S37RH Received April 28, 2010. Revised Manuscript Received July 21, 2010 Here, a new procedure and method are presented for the production of highly grafted polymer brushes. Thiolterminated polyethylene oxide (PEO-SH) of molecular weight (Mw) 20 000 (20k) is grafted to a gold surface from highly concentrated aqueous solutions of nonthiolated polyethylene oxide homopolymer. The Mw and volume fraction of the homopolymer solution are varied in order to control the grafting density of the resulting PEO-SH brush. As a result, 20k Mw PEO-SH brushes with grafting densities up to 0.3 chains/nm2 are achieved, as determined by ellipsometry. Highly concentrated homopolymer solutions of volume fraction greater than ∼12% and Mw greater than ∼938 produce nearideal solvent conditions for the 20k Mw PEO-SH chains; we have found that this facilitates the achievement of higher grafting densities of end-functionalized polymer brushes than would be possible from simple solutions. We propose this as a suitable method for applications where the grafting density of a brush surface must be accurately varied and controlled consistently. The effect of chemisorption time and cleaning procedure on the resulting brush grafting density are also explored.
Introduction Polymer brushes exhibit unique surface properties that are of use and interest in a wide range of disciplines and applications. Brushes consist of a layer of polymers tethered by one end to a solid surface, with the chain extending into the solution. For densely grafted brushes where the mean separation D between grafting points is small compared to the chain dimensions R ≈ aN3/5 of a free chain (D